安裝 Steam
登入
|
語言
簡體中文
日本語(日文)
한국어(韓文)
ไทย(泰文)
Български(保加利亞文)
Čeština(捷克文)
Dansk(丹麥文)
Deutsch(德文)
English(英文)
Español - España(西班牙文 - 西班牙)
Español - Latinoamérica(西班牙文 - 拉丁美洲)
Ελληνικά(希臘文)
Français(法文)
Italiano(義大利文)
Bahasa Indonesia(印尼語)
Magyar(匈牙利文)
Nederlands(荷蘭文)
Norsk(挪威文)
Polski(波蘭文)
Português(葡萄牙文 - 葡萄牙)
Português - Brasil(葡萄牙文 - 巴西)
Română(羅馬尼亞文)
Русский(俄文)
Suomi(芬蘭文)
Svenska(瑞典文)
Türkçe(土耳其文)
tiếng Việt(越南文)
Українська(烏克蘭文)
回報翻譯問題
- Ignore the tip in the guide about turning off the lights. It's a waste of time, as you aren't required to pay the electric bill or rent
- As above, ignore rent, electric bill, and buying stock from uncle Tim (if you want the achievements, buy all the stock and then reload to get your money back, or just wait until you have $1M)
- Don't spend a ton of time OCing. You hit diminishing returns pretty quick if you really try to hit up against the thermal limits. Just crank everything up to reasonable level (80C for the CPU and close-ish to 95 for the GPU) and call it a day
- Run with Shift!
- I don't buy EVERYTHING on PCBay, but I do buy most stuff. I pretty much ignore any GPU below 1080, Celeron processors, PPUs below 750, and any cases. You aren't going to consistently have enough spare parts to be building PCs from scratch with used parts, so ignore the cases.
On the same hand, if you have 2 weak GPUs that can be multi-GPU, it may be worth going multi-GPU in order to get that 10k score to get the 3x value, since it would be too tough to get the 10k score using just one of the GPUs.
Hope that helps.
Example: with overclocks and 1 GPU I get 12000. Is it worth adding second GPU (+new price of the 2nd one?) or rather save the GPU for another build?